10, 20, or 30 Dance Fitness Classes at Jazzercise (Up to 80% Off). Valid at All U.S. and Canada Locations.

Multiple Locations

In a Nutshell

One-hour classes combine cardio, strength training, and dance for total-body workout set to current music hits

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires Sep 12, 2013. Amount paid never expires.Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Valid only for option purchased. Must activate by expiration date, classes expire 6 months from activation date. Valid only for new clients or individuals who have not used services in past 6 months. Not valid for Junior Jazzercise. Classes must be used by the same person. Valid at all U.S. and Canada locations.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Jazzercise

Today, it's undeniable: Jazzercise is a worldwide empire, spanning more than 3,400+ locations and 32,000 weekly classes across the globe. It's also hip; gone are the leotards and legwarmers of the 1980s, replaced with a high-intensity blend of cardio, strength training, kickboxing and power yoga performed to hits by chart-toppers from Shakira to Pitbull. The class formats, which vary according to different toning goals, are just as diverse as the program's move set, with recent additions such as Fusion, Core, and Strike broadening the workouts' variety and application. Instructors cultivate a noncompetitive atmosphere where all exercisers are welcome regardless of age, build, or fitness background. This sense of community keeps Jazzercise devotees coming back, but so too do the results; benefits ranging from weight loss and boosted core strength to increased flexibility and stress relief. Participants can expect to burn up to 800 calories in one pulse-pounding 60-minute class.

Jazzercise's continued success can be traced to the innovation of its founder, Judi Sheppard Missett. While teaching jazz dance in the 1960s, she decided to step away from tradition by offering an experimental class that allowed her students to simply dance without the judgment of mirrors or the constraints of rigid technique. Little did she know that this “just for fun” class was the prototype for what would become the Jazzercise sensation.